The argument of this thesis is that Finnegans Wake is a peculiarly appropriate text for an investigation of the academic discipline of English, and that the issue of readership is the best way to approach the Wake. The thesis, which is organised into three main sections, shows that both Finnegans Wake and the discipline of English Studies are similarly engaged in problems of defining audiences. The opening section shows that the Wake has long been seen as a limit to literature, and as a defining text of literary study. Reception theory proves unable to cope with a study of historical audiences. Finnegans Wake was written over a period roughly concomitant with the rapid professionalisation of English studies and underwent a loss of audiences...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "This book presents for the first time a ...
Finnegans Wake is a text that is comprised of hundreds of different discourses, languages, and conve...
Lucia Boldrini's study examines how Dante's literary and linguistic theories in his treatises and in...
The argument of this thesis is that Finnegans Wake is a peculiarly appropriate text for an investiga...
"Finnegans Wake" has struck many of its exegetes as the epitome of the postmodern text. The oddity o...
This text deals with the relationship between literature and mathematics. It is the first of a serie...
The thesis challenges the paradigm of hierarchical interpretive competence adopted in the academic c...
James Joyce’s late work, Finnegans Wake (1939), necessitates shared reading like few others: its pho...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "James Joyce and the Act of Reception is ...
James Joyce's Finnegans Wake is known as one of the most difficult texts in all of literature. A one...
The challenge of James Joyce’s final work, Finnegans Wake, is an ethical one, and one whose implicat...
Had Finnegans Wake not been written, some seminal post-1950s innovations in the field of modern lite...
There is no apex of study for Finnegans Wake. Readers should be looking towards hypertextual referen...
The aims of the thesis are to show how "grammar,' etymological sense of "art or technique of the let...
The subject of influence and allusion has been a central concern in criticism of Finnegans Wake from...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "This book presents for the first time a ...
Finnegans Wake is a text that is comprised of hundreds of different discourses, languages, and conve...
Lucia Boldrini's study examines how Dante's literary and linguistic theories in his treatises and in...
The argument of this thesis is that Finnegans Wake is a peculiarly appropriate text for an investiga...
"Finnegans Wake" has struck many of its exegetes as the epitome of the postmodern text. The oddity o...
This text deals with the relationship between literature and mathematics. It is the first of a serie...
The thesis challenges the paradigm of hierarchical interpretive competence adopted in the academic c...
James Joyce’s late work, Finnegans Wake (1939), necessitates shared reading like few others: its pho...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "James Joyce and the Act of Reception is ...
James Joyce's Finnegans Wake is known as one of the most difficult texts in all of literature. A one...
The challenge of James Joyce’s final work, Finnegans Wake, is an ethical one, and one whose implicat...
Had Finnegans Wake not been written, some seminal post-1950s innovations in the field of modern lite...
There is no apex of study for Finnegans Wake. Readers should be looking towards hypertextual referen...
The aims of the thesis are to show how "grammar,' etymological sense of "art or technique of the let...
The subject of influence and allusion has been a central concern in criticism of Finnegans Wake from...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "This book presents for the first time a ...
Finnegans Wake is a text that is comprised of hundreds of different discourses, languages, and conve...
Lucia Boldrini's study examines how Dante's literary and linguistic theories in his treatises and in...